Bitski Node Provider
A Bitski powered Web3 provider for Node environments, and App Wallet.
Installation
npm install --save bitski-node
Basic Usage
Start by importing the SDK, as well as Web3. Then, create the provider by calling getProvider()
and pass it to Web3. The only required parameter is a client id.
const Bitski = require("bitski-node");
const Web3 = require("web3");
const provider = Bitski.getProvider("YOUR CLIENT ID");
const web3 = new Web3(provider);
Usage with App Wallet
If you have an App Wallet, or want to use anything that requires an account you need to pass in your client credentials. You can create these from the developer portal.
const Bitski = require("bitski-node");
const Web3 = require("web3");
const options = {
credentials: {
id: 'YOUR CREDENTIAL ID',
secret: 'YOUR CREDENTIAL SECRET'
}
};
const provider = Bitski.getProvider("YOUR CLIENT ID", options);
const web3 = new Web3(provider);
Using other networks
To use a Bitski wallet with a custom chain, you can create a network configuration and pass that in:
const network = {
rpcUrl: 'http://localhost:9545',
chainId: 9,
}
const provider = bitski.getProvider({ network: network });
This works great for development blockchains, sidechains, and more.
Usage with Truffle
As of truffle v5, you can easily deploy contracts using your Bitski App Wallet. Configure your truffle.js
to supply a provider like this:
const { ProviderManager } = require('bitski-node');
const manager = new ProviderManager('YOUR-CREDENTIAL-ID', 'YOUR-CREDENTIAL-SECRET');
module.exports = {
networks: {
live: {
network_id: '1',
provider: () => {
return manager.getProvider({network: 'mainnet'});
}
},
rinkeby: {
network_id: '4',
provider: () => {
return manager.getProvider({network: 'rinkeby'});
}
}
}
};
Report Vulnerabilities
Bitski provides a “bug bounty” to engage with the security researchers in the community. If you have found a vulnerability in our product or service, please submit a vulnerability report to the Bitski security team.